The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion

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The Wings of the Dove
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MadgeUK wrote: "True Lily, including me:) However, I don't think James made Kate enticing - he seems take the traditional view. Also, if we think about WotD as Milly representing his dying cousin, he would be unl..."
Madge, you make such a solid, solid point there about Milly, ie, that James would have (and did) write her as the sympathetic character. But i LIKE Kate...and I'm fairly certain I try to rationalize for actions as I read along.
I plan to re-read the last book of the Iliad tonight, and i'm packing WoD, too, to catch up on the reading. Hope, therefore, to post Tuesday.
Madge, you make such a solid, solid point there about Milly, ie, that James would have (and did) write her as the sympathetic character. But i LIKE Kate...and I'm fairly certain I try to rationalize for actions as I read along.
I plan to re-read the last book of the Iliad tonight, and i'm packing WoD, too, to catch up on the reading. Hope, therefore, to post Tuesday.
MadgeUK wrote: "You like the bad gels eh, Adelle?:D"
Lol. I plead the fifth.
http://www.google.com/search?q=i+plea...
But I plan to argue that Kate is not a bad girl.
That even though James thought that he was writing Millie to be the high point, that unconsciously he was writing KATE to be the highest, best character.
Lol. I plead the fifth.
http://www.google.com/search?q=i+plea...
But I plan to argue that Kate is not a bad girl.
That even though James thought that he was writing Millie to be the high point, that unconsciously he was writing KATE to be the highest, best character.

Should be an interesting discussion. Don't know about "highest, best," given his supposed relationship to the model for Milly. But certainly we have several morally ambiguous decisions floating around here for meaty discussion?

http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/g/...
Another review of the same book, with more revealing insights. ((Possible Spoiler.):-
http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/05/16...
Nytimes link asks for a log in. Cannot read the " very interesting essay about him."


A homo-erotic relationship with a woman? Huh?


"Metaphor, Hysteria, and the Ethics of Desire in Wings of the Dove"
http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/engl...
I don't pretend to totally understand it; Lacan still remains impenetrable for me. But the gist of the idea that life itself is unfulfilled desire that only is fulfilled with death is tantalizing (if I interpret at least one possibility of these words faithfully to their intent) -- especially this week as I watch a beloved relative's journey through palliative care. It is also a view of life and death that I find painful. Still, it lends credence to Sir Luke's stance towards Milly, which is somewhat intriguing, too, considering the sibling rivalry and familial communications between Henry and his brother William.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_...
The word "hysteria" confuses me. My own sense is that it was one that was popularized by Freud (or already in wide-spread use), especially as applicable to women, during that period of history and has subsequently been debunked and/or replaced by more discerning terminology, but that view is subject to clarification, even correction, let alone replacement!
Here is a dictionary definition (note the etymology):
Etymology: New Latin, from English hysteric + New Latin -ia; Latin hystericus of the womb
1 a : a psychoneurosis that is marked by emotional excitability involving disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions b : a similar disease of domesticated animals; specifically : CANINE HYSTERIA
2 : conduct or an outbreak of conduct exhibiting unmanageable fear or emotional excess in individuals or groups
synonym see MANIA
"hysteria." Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged. Merriam-Webster, 2002. http://unabridged.merriam-webster.com (9 Apr. 2012).
Incidentally, this is the dictionary source that I rely upon. If the OED were available online at a comparable price, I might choose otherwise. But, I treat this as simply another necessary "utility" or subscription. It does indeed differ from m-w.com, which has become so heavily infused with advertising, but used to be my first path before coming here for more obscure words. Now, I simply keep this on a tab, often an open one.


I am THIS close to finishing. So this weekend I'll be reading that essay.

Thank you for all the notes you have been providing.
I spent more time with Norton this morning. It is a) giving me additional eyes into WotD, b) whetting my interest in reading other books by James, and c) making me wonder what criticism of WotD beyond the 1960's has been like, especially post-911 and post-Iraq war. It raised questions of what authors of the 20th and 21st centuries to compare with James. (Is Graham Greene one of them? I have read very little of his work.) I found myself asking: 1) what novels compare a less naive America with Europe, 2) what are the comparable post-World War novels?

"January 1, 1993
"Henry James rebelled intuitively against the tyranny and banality of plots. Believing a life to have many potential paths and a self to hold many destinies, he hung the evocative shadow of "what might have been" over much of what he wrote. Yet James also realized that no life can be lived--and no story written--except by submission to some outcome. The limiting conventions of society and literature are, he found, almost inescapable. In a major, comprehensive new study of James's work, Millicent Bell explores this oscillation between hope and fatalism, indeterminacy and form, and uncertainty and meaning. In the process Bell provides fresh insight into how we read and interpret fiction.
Continued within (view spoiler)

"January 1, 1993
"Henry James rebelled intuitively against the tyranny and banality of plots. Believing a l..."
This makes a lot of sense, Lily. Thanks!
Lily wrote: "I spent more time with Norton this morning. It is..."
Lily, thank you for this reminder. The library wanted their copy back some weeks ago, but I'm about ready to read essays and post reminded me that there were essays at the back of the Norton edition.
Lily, thank you for this reminder. The library wanted their copy back some weeks ago, but I'm about ready to read essays and post reminded me that there were essays at the back of the Norton edition.
Lily wrote: " I found myself asking: 1) what novels compare a less naive America with Europe, 2) what are the comparable post-World War novels? .."
Are you thinking post-WWI or post-WWII? Although, I sat here awhile this morning and couldn't think of any for either case. But surely, surely, there must be some. Specifically, I can't think of any highlighting American women... Hemingway has Jake in The Sun Also Rises (right?) Fitzgerald has Americans in Europe in Tender Is the Night.
Oddly...I can't think of any Americans in England post-war novels.
Are you thinking post-WWI or post-WWII? Although, I sat here awhile this morning and couldn't think of any for either case. But surely, surely, there must be some. Specifically, I can't think of any highlighting American women... Hemingway has Jake in The Sun Also Rises (right?) Fitzgerald has Americans in Europe in Tender Is the Night.
Oddly...I can't think of any Americans in England post-war novels.

We went to Paris, and who can blame us? Everyone else did. Charles Ryder in "Brideshead Revisited," Stephen Daedalus between "Portrait of the Artist" and "Ulysses". And the real life authors went to Paris and the Riviera. Proust simply stayed there.
Oscar Wilde said, "Good Americans go to Paris when they die." It is the only religious proposition in which I have faith and so I try to be good.
I may not know what I'm talking about here, but I think Paris was an idea for many people, and London had ceased to be one -- at least for Americans.

I was thinking of that song the other day in the context of Nick Carraway's comments at the opening of Gatsby. Although Nick went to New York.
I think Leslie Fiedler said that in the 1920s artists went to Paris. In the 1960s they went to the mental hospital.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuX5Rh...
One can imagine Densher's room nearby.
http://europeforvisitors.com/venice/a...
Better picture, a bit of history, a traveler's viewpoint. (Has link to a second page of pictures.)
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=venice,...
Satellite view?

Pretty good site for pictures of Venice. Have minimally explored a few of the links.
Lily wrote: "Warning: the link below may be considered to contain SPOILER information by readers who have not completed WotD.
This critique can be rather rambling and disconnected, particularly with its many r..."
I must forgive "rambling and disconnected," LOL. Interesting read. I hadn't thought of the letter in terms of a fetish...but it is. That sad image of Densher carefully unwrapping it...in his mind...
I never read Paradise Lost, nor The Aspern Papers. Those remarks were more difficult to follow.
Thank you for posting the link.
This critique can be rather rambling and disconnected, particularly with its many r..."
I must forgive "rambling and disconnected," LOL. Interesting read. I hadn't thought of the letter in terms of a fetish...but it is. That sad image of Densher carefully unwrapping it...in his mind...
I never read Paradise Lost, nor The Aspern Papers. Those remarks were more difficult to follow.
Thank you for posting the link.
Lily wrote:
From this "Metaphor, Hysteria and th..."
I had to google Lacan. No idea.
I don't see Kate as showing Milly how to use non-satisfaction as a buffer or as an alternative to death.
I can sort of see that there is a difference between a lack of will to live and a will to die...but...without seeing Milly those last days...it's hard to judge.
The lines I really liked was:
"Now we can understand why Lord Mark’s avowal of Kate’s and Densher’s engagement was so damaging to Milly. Lord Mark didn’t tell Milly anything she didn’t already know, but he collapsed the distance between her knowledge and her belief"
That resonates as true.
From this "Metaphor, Hysteria and th..."
I had to google Lacan. No idea.
I don't see Kate as showing Milly how to use non-satisfaction as a buffer or as an alternative to death.
I can sort of see that there is a difference between a lack of will to live and a will to die...but...without seeing Milly those last days...it's hard to judge.
The lines I really liked was:
"Now we can understand why Lord Mark’s avowal of Kate’s and Densher’s engagement was so damaging to Milly. Lord Mark didn’t tell Milly anything she didn’t already know, but he collapsed the distance between her knowledge and her belief"
That resonates as true.
Lily wrote: "http://www.italyguides.it/us/venice_i...
Pretty good site for pictures of Venice. Have minimally explored a few of the links."
The bridgelinks were lovely! I especially liked the one with the violinist playing. That WOULD be a good place to sit and play. Were there a Densher, he might well have seen similar sights. Thank you for finding.
Pretty good site for pictures of Venice. Have minimally explored a few of the links."
The bridgelinks were lovely! I especially liked the one with the violinist playing. That WOULD be a good place to sit and play. Were there a Densher, he might well have seen similar sights. Thank you for finding.

'Hysteria: 1 A wild uncontrollable emotion or excitement. 2 A functional disturbance of the nervous system of psychoneurotic origin (Mod.I hysteric).
Hysteric 1 (a) A fit of hysteria. (b) colloq. overwhelming mirth or laughter 2 a hysterical person (l.f. Gk husterikos of the womb [hustero] hysteria being thought to occur more frequently in women than in men and to be associated with the womb.'

Don't forget that some critics and some just plain ordinary readers feel Milton made Satan perhaps an even more enticing character than God. LOL!